Tech Advisor

Project Alloy to save PCs?

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The jury’s still out on whether anyone’s going to buy Intel’s VR vision, though. Mark Hachman reports

Y our PC is bored. Your smartphone is, too. While you’re reading this story, your digital device is twiddling its thumbs, waiting for you to do something. When a smartphone can offer enough computing power for most tasks without breaking a sweat, you can understand why PC sales are plummeting – and why Intel is so enamoured with virtual reality.

Intel announced the Project Alloy virtualrea­lity headset at its Intel Developer Forum (see page 6), as well as the next-generation Kaby Lake microproce­ssor. Kaby Lake PCs are scheduled to ship in the autumn. Intel executives positioned both announceme­nts in the context of VR: Alloy for consuming VR content, and Kaby Lake for producing it.

Pinning the PC’s hopes upon VR

A few months ago, Intel executives began promoting virtual reality as the leading edge of the PC, especially VR headsets such as the Oculus Rift that depend on the PC for their processing power. “Virtual reality is very computatio­nally intensive, and if Intel can create a requiremen­t for more computatio­nally intensive applicatio­ns, then guess what? That works for them,” said Nathan Brookwood, principal at Insight64, an microproce­ssor analyst firm.

Intel expects the worlds of virtual reality (the Oculus Rift) and augmented reality (the HoloLens) will eventually merge. That’s what Intel’s latest project, Project Alloy embodies: a device that primarily projects a virtual reality environmen­t around the user, but incorporat­es aspects of augmented reality, too.

Alloy uses a pair of RealSense cameras to ‘see’ physical objects like a user’s hand, and project them into the virtual space. “We think this is going to be big,” Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said during his IDF keynote. “It’s so different than anything else that’s out there right now.”

Beginning in the middle of 2017, Intel plans to open-source the Alloy hardware, so any of its traditiona­l hardware partners can jump on the bandwagon. It runs on Windows Holographi­c, the Microsoft operating system that powers its HoloLens. Also midway through 2017, Microsoft plans a free upgrade to Windows 10 that will let Windows Holographi­c devices interact with the Windows 10 PCs.

It’s easy to imagine what both Intel and Microsoft hope will happen next: devices such as Project Alloy become the next big thing, selling millions of PCs with Intel microproce­ssors and Windows 10 licenses. Alloy and its cousins will become PCs you can strap to your face.

It almost sounds like Project Alloy could be Intel’s version of the Microsoft Surface – a game-changing product that could lead the way into an entirely new category of products. But it’s still not clear whether Alloy represents a product unto itself, or just a reference design that the company will provide to its partners.

An uncertain future

If this all sounds like a desperate attempt to latch on to the latest trend, you’re not alone. Unit sales of VR devices aren’t expected to take off until 2018 or so, if that, according to Jon Peddie Research. And it’s unclear what will drive the technology industry until then.

In fact, we actually have a better idea of what will drive the technology industry after VR devices: self-driving cars. BMW executives appeared onstage to reveal their plans to ship cars that allow a driver to take his or her eyes of the road by 2020 or 2021. Also, Ford recently announced plans to build fully self-driving cars in the same timeframe.

As Insight 64’s Brookwood noted, the amount of silicon and intelligen­ce a selfdrivin­g car requires vastly outweighs what today’s automobile­s require. Products that require sophistica­ted processors to crunch massive amounts of data provide opportunit­y to raise Intel’s profile once again.

The bottom line, though, is that a self-driving car sells itself. Virtual reality? Merged reality? The jury’s still out.

There is hope, though. Kathleen Maher, an analyst with JPR, said the ramificati­ons of virtual reality in the workplace and the home aren’t yet fully understood. “It’s been a big wake-up call for me, that virtual reality replaces the abstractio­ns we’ve been using, like pages and text,” she said. “That’s a really long-term view, but Intel has to be thinking of the long term.”

 ??  ?? Ford plans to triple its fleet of autonomous research vehicles in 2016, and triple it again in 2017, on its way to mass production of self-driving cars by 2021
Ford plans to triple its fleet of autonomous research vehicles in 2016, and triple it again in 2017, on its way to mass production of self-driving cars by 2021
 ??  ?? Project Alloy
Project Alloy

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